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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing

Reporting an Issue

Issues are tracked in the Github issue tracker of the librespot repo.

If you have encountered a bug, please report it, as we rely on user reports to fix them.

Please also make sure that your issues are helpful. To ensure that your issue is helpful, please read over this brief checklist to avoid the more common pitfalls:

- Please take a moment to search/read previous similar issues to ensure you aren’t posting a duplicate. Duplicates will be closed immediately.
- Please include a clear description of what the issue is. Issues with descriptions such as ‘It hangs after 40 minutes’ will be closed immediately.
- Please include, where possible, steps to reproduce the bug, along with any other material that is related to the bug. For example, if librespot consistently crashes when you try to play a song, please include the Spotify URI of that song. This can be immensely helpful in quickly pinpointing and resolving issues.
- Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, please include a backtrace where possible. Recent versions of librespot should produce these automatically when it crashes, and print them to the console, but in some cases, you may need to run ‘export RUST_BACKTRACE=full’ before running librespot to enable backtraces.

Contributing Code

If there is an issue that you would like to write a fix for, or a feature you would like to implement, we use the following flow for updating code in the librespot repo:

Fork -> Fix -> PR -> Review -> Merge

This is how all code is added to the repository, even by those with write access.

Steps before Committing

In order to prepare for a PR, you will need to do a couple of things first:

Make any changes that you are going to make to the code, but do not commit yet.

Make sure that the code is correctly formatted by running:

cargo +stable fmt --all

This command runs the previously installed stable version of rustfmt, a code formatting tool that will automatically correct any formatting that you have used that does not conform with the librespot code style. Once that command has run, you will need to rebuild the project:

cargo build

Once it has built, and you have confirmed there are no warnings or errors, you should commit your changes.

git commit -a -m “My fancy fix”

N.B. Please, for the sake of a readable history, do not bundle multiple major changes into a single commit. Instead, break it up into multiple commits.

Once you have made the commits you wish to have merged, push them to your forked repo:

git push

Then open a pull request on the main librespot repo.

Once a pull request is under way, it will be reviewed by one of the project maintainers, and either approved for merging, or have changes requested. Please be alert in the review period for possible questions about implementation decisions, implemented behaviour, and requests for changes. Once the PR is approved, it will be merged into the main repo.

Happy Contributing :)